Burch v. Mounts

185 S.W. 889, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 513
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 12, 1916
DocketNo. 951.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 185 S.W. 889 (Burch v. Mounts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burch v. Mounts, 185 S.W. 889, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 513 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

HUFF, C. J.

The appellee, Mounts, instituted this suit in the district court of Deaf Smith county, against J. P. Burch and J. H. Bowers. He declared on a note executed hy Bowers and secured by a mortgage lien. The note was for $576.50, and the lien sought to be foreclosed on 80 head of cattle; that the mortgage was executed June 21, 1915, and thereafter that Burch caused the cattle to be levied on by the sheriff under an execution and sale, and that Burch refuses to recognize the validity of Mount’s mortgage. He prayed for judgment against Bowers on the note, interest and attorney’s fees, and against Burch for a foreclosure of the mortgage lien, and in the alternative, in the event that it should be found that Burch had removed the cattle from the confines of Deaf Smith county, recover damages for conversion, and for judgment against Burch for the value of the cattle.

Burch answered by general and special exceptions, and at the May term of the district court he recovered a judgment against Bowers for the sum of $2,400, and that on the 19th day of June, 1915, the clerk of the court issued an execution on this judgment and delivered it to the sheriff of Deaf Smith county, who levied on Bowers’ cattle, among which were the cattle described in plaintiff’s petition, and in his mortgage, on the 21st day of June, 1915, at 7:30 o’clock a. m., and thereafter advertised and sold the cattle July 6th, at which sale he became the purchaser and the cattle were delivered him by the sheriff, and other matters not necessary to set out.

The case was submitted to the jury upon special issues, and upon these issues and the jury’s findings the trial court rendered judgment for Mounts against Bowers, for the principal due on the note, together with interest and attorney’s fees, and foreclosed the mortgage lien on the cattle as against him and Burch, and also rendered a judgment that Mounts have execution against Burch for the sum recovered for conversion of the cattle. The judgment is in the alternative in several respects, which we will not discuss, as the case will be disposed of on other grounds. The facts in this case show that J. H. Bowers was indebted upon a promissory note, payable to R. N. Mounts, in the sum of $576.50, dated April 1, 1915, and due October 1st, thereafter. To secure the payment of this note Bowers executed a mortgage on the 21st day of June, 1915, on 79 head of three year old steers, subject to a former mortgage. This mortgage was filed June 21, 1915, at 8:18 o’clock a. m. It appears that on the 19th day of June, 1915, an execution was issued out of the district court of Deaf Smith county, on a judgment in favor of J. P. Burch against J. H. Bowers, for $2,408.15, with interest due thereon; the judgment having been rendered May 20, 1915. The return on the execution shows that it was placed in the hands of the sheriff, R. W. Baird, on the 19th day of June, 1915, at 3 o’clock p. m.; the return thereon further showing that he executed the same by levying and taking into his possession 79 head of three year old steers. The brands on the cattle are described the same as they are described in the mortgage, and it is admitted they are the same cattle. There was also levied on 10 head of two year old steers and 57 yearling steers, not included in this controversy. The 79 head of steers, the return recites, were levied on at 7:30 o’clock a. m., June 21, 1915. The cattle were properly advertised June 25, 1915, to be sold in that county July 6, 1915, at the Prank Bassett place, and that 79 steers and 1 cow were sold at that time and place to J. P. Burch for $5.50 per head, which were delivered to Burch by the sheriff. On the morning of June 21, 1915, the sheriff and Burch, the judgment plaintiff, went east of the town of Hereford and found the 79 head of steers in a one-section pasture. The cattle were scattered over the pasture and some grazing in the creek. The sheriff says he found a man on the place in charge of it, and that he" made two counts of the cattle and did not leave the cattle in charge of any one, but assumed charge of them himself, and appointed no one to take charge of them, but that he saw and counted them and then left them to go to other places and levy on additional cattle; that he did not round them up in a bunch or at that time drive them anywhere, only out of the creek up where he could count them; that he took charge of them himself but did not stay with them. He testifies that he did not go back until the next Tuesday or Wednesday — he was not positive which day. The levy was made on Monday. When he returned he took them off to the Bassett pasture. The yearlings levied on were in a different pasture south of the town, and it appears from his testimony that the sheriff and Bowers went to levy on the yearlings in the afternoon of the day of the levy on the steers. He says he would not be positive that he told Bowers of the levy on the steers, but that he talked to him the Sunday before the levy, telling him that he had the execution and that he possibly took it for granted Bowers knew of the levy, but he does say he told Bowers he had counted the cattle and they were all there. He further testified that in a conversation over the phone with Bowers, on Sunday, that he told Bowers in case he made the levy on the cattle that he wanted to leave the cattle with him, and Bowers said that would be all right. *891 The reason he did not move the cattle at •that time, he thought he had permission from Bowers to leave them there. The reason he gave to Bowers, and to which Bowers assented, for leaving the cattle was that they would do better there than to move them. He moved them afterwards because Bowers requested on Tuesday after the levy that he ■do so. The facts show that the levy on the 79 head was first made, and the nest was on the two year old steers near where the 79 were located. These cattle were all east of the town. The yearlings were the last levied on and were south of town in a different neighborhood. In the afternoon of the 21st of June, Bowers and the sheriff went to levy on the yearlings, and on their return the sheriff testifies they agreed on the pasturage. The cattle were considered in two classes: The charge for the yearlings was to be a cent a day, and the steers 1¼ or 1½ cents per day. The witness further states he went into the pasture and ran the cattle upon the hill and counted them, and at the time he did so made a memorandum of the number from which his return on the execution was afterwards typewritten. He noted the time of the levy by looking at his watch at the time of making it. There was a crippled steer and two cows and a calf in the pasture with this 79 head, which were not levied on. The sheriff called on the man on the place, who appears to have been in charge for Bowers, to point out the cattle not belonging to Bowers, and he pointed out 1 crippled steer, and the milk cattle were not levied on. Bowers testified that he did not agree or give the sheriff permission to leave the cattle in the pasture on Sunday when talking to him over the phone, but says:

“I did not make Mr. Baird a price for the pasturage of these cows until Monday. I told him at that time that I thought a cent a head or 1½ cents would be all right, but if he goes ahead and makes the levy we may make some trade and I will see you further.”

Bowers, by his testimony, shows that he knew that the sheriff had the writ, and that unless he and Burch could settle the judgment the levy would be made, and was told of the writ in the phone conversation by the sheriff. He and Burch met on Sunday, when Burch told him he would levy that day unless he got his money.

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Bluebook (online)
185 S.W. 889, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burch-v-mounts-texapp-1916.